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Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office
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Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Dec 28, 2015

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Page 1: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay

Laura E. Petes

NOAA Climate Program Office

Page 2: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Apalachicola Oysters

• 90% of oysters for state of Florida, 10% of oysters for U.S.

• Rapid growth rates and high reproductive output

• Adapted to brackish conditions (mix of fresh and salt water), natural timing of freshwater input

• Reefs provide complex habitat to fish and invertebrates

1909

Page 3: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Drought Effects on Bay

CP

DB

EB

CP=Cat Point, DB=Dry Bar, EB=East Bay

Page 4: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Feb. 20, 2007

http://drought.unl.edu/dm/monitor.html

Salinity in Apalachicola Bay

Data from ANERR

CP

DB

EB

Page 5: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Nov. 20, 2007

http://drought.unl.edu/dm/monitor.html

Salinity in Apalachicola Bay

Data from ANERR

CP

DB

EB

Page 6: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Mar. 28, 2008

http://drought.unl.edu/dm/monitor.html

Salinity in Apalachicola Bay

Data from ANERR

CP

DB

EB

Page 7: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Predictions of increased salinity on

oysters1.Reduced survival, growth, and condition of oysters;

increased prevalence of disease

2.Range expansion of marine predators (e.g. oyster drills)

Page 8: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Dermo Disease

• Protozoan parasite (Perkinsus marinus)

• Host-to-host transmission; waterborne infective stages abundant in summer

• Thrives in high salinity

• Can cause sublethal effects and mortality

Page 9: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Salinity Impacts on Oysters• Collected at Dry Bar; acclimated at ambient

salinity

• Randomized into 4 salinity treatments (9, 17, 25, 33 ppt)

• 10 large, 10 small oysters per tank

• Held at ambient temperature (15°C Winter; 25°C Summer) for 5 weeks

• Measured mortality and disease load

Page 10: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Mortality

Page 11: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Weighted Prevalence

None

Moderate

Page 12: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Conclusions

• High salinity (17-25 ppt) leads to oyster mortality

• High mortality from Dermo disease in Summer due in part to increased infection severity

Implications:

• Drought and reduced freshwater input will lead to more summer die-offs of oysters

• Consistent with field data (~50% mortality)

Page 13: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Predatory Oyster Drills

• Stramonita haemastoma (Florida rock snail)

• Direct fertilization; lay egg masses

• Common predators of oysters in the Panhandle

• Increase in number in Apalachicola Bay during periods of high salinity

Page 14: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Salinity Impacts on Predators

• Predation under different salinity treatments (9, 17, 25, 33 ppt)

• One oyster drill and five oysters per container

• Oyster mortality and source (predation vs. disease) quantified; dead oysters replaced daily

Page 15: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Predator Weight Gain

*All oyster drills in 9 ppt died within 48 hours!!!

Page 16: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Question: What are the effects of salinity on oyster drill hatching success?

Experimental Set-Up:

• Egg capsules separated and sorted into groups of 20

• Salinity treatments (9, 17, 25, 33 ppt)

• Hatching quantified weekly– Unhatched egg capsules white– Hatched egg capsules clear

Page 17: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Oyster Drill Hatching Success

Page 18: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Conclusions

• Oyster drills and their egg capsules have low tolerance for fresh water

Implications:

• Both predation and disease important drivers of mortality

• Freshwater input would limit predation

Page 19: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Implications for Watershed Management

Freshwater input is important for oysters due to:– Lowering disease-related mortality– Decreasing the number of oyster predators

Future studies should address timing and magnitude of freshwater releases necessary for oysters

Water resource and fishery management will become increasingly difficult with climate change

Page 20: Impacts of upstream drought on downstream oysters in Apalachicola Bay Laura E. Petes NOAA Climate Program Office.

Acknowledgments

• FSU students: Alicia Brown, Carley Knight, Ryan Corley • Wakulla Co. teachers: Margy Callaghan, Russell Herron • FSUCML staff• ANERR staff• Virginia Institute of Marine Science